and then got covered up with thought.
I'm not sure what this means. Can you explain more?
Good eye, this is a mechanism that I'm still working on understanding and describing. I see it very common with others, but I'm not sure if other's can easily recognize it, because it might be more automatic and fast happening for them.
I really like this definition of emotion from Dan Siegel in Brainstorm, It's only mentioned once in the book, not sure why he wouldn't repeat it more:
Now add to this the reality that these emotional sensations are doing exactly what emotions do, they are getting us to “evoke motion,” e-motion. They create a state of mind in which our whole system, our brain and whole body, is being readied to take action. -- Dan Siegel
Before this definition, I also like Karla McLaren's expansion & reference to Antonio Damasio's definition:
Damasio also puts forward the idea that emotions are “
action-requiring neurological programs,” which is such a wonderful way of approaching them. And in my work, I had already done just that! So, for instance,
fear requires that you take action to orient to change and novelty, or to avoid physical harm.
Anger requires that you take action to protect or restore your sense of self or your standpoint (or the selves and standpoints of others, if your anger is related to social justice).
Shame requires that you take action to avoid injuring others or yourself (if the shame is authentic to you. It’s important to first identify whether the shame has been applied as a control mechanism from the outside).
Sadness requires that you take action to let go of something that isn’t working anyway, and grief requires that you actively mourn something that is lost irretrievably. And so forth.
--- source:
http://karlamclaren.com/emotions-are-action-requiring-neurological-programs-revisited/
So I'm going to hypothesize that an experience starts with an emotion, something that comes from within the brain and body in response or reaction to some sort of stimulus. The design of the emotion is to 'evoke motion', or more technically they are 'neurological programs' readying the mind/body for some sort of action.
The problem comes in with people who have been threat conditioned to be afraid of emotions (feeling, expressing, listening, following, etc).
Emotions from within have become the 'threat' focus instead of actual danger and risks from external sources.
Then instead of using story and thoughts to add perspective and context to the emotion, thoughts are used to work against or cover up the emotion.
Blame, guilt, projection, or transference are common ways to use thought to cover up emotions. The short term benefit is that there is no more need to respond to the emotion (response-ability is transferred to the external), the long term downside is that it creates a stuck 'victim' mentality role. This is where someone else or the external world has to change in order for that emotion to complete.
Going back to the 4D model:
emotions come first, then they want to be
embodied with felt sensations, but the thinking brain steps in and stops the feelings and expressions (due to the mind's ability to over-ride emotions in the face of perceived threat). Thoughts (beliefs & stories of projections or transference) are now used to dis-own, dismiss, ignore, avoid, deny, smother, distract, etc.; essentially to weaken and bury the emotion into an unresolved state of memory stored in the body. And the timekeeper part of the brain (time dimension) never comes in with a
proper time-stamp, so whenever this memory is revisited, it feels like it's happening in real time present moment urgency. Reinforcing a vicious loop cycle of emotional memory flashbacks, getting retraumatized and re-storing that memory with like or higher emotional charge.
Also the thought element of
'proper perspective and context' gets lost in the shuffle. So these fractured memories often are stuck emotional charges (evoking motion that gets stopped) matched with projection thoughts; to push the responsibility of motion onto external sources, or to procrastinate dealing with the emotion until later time.
Essentially it's a case that likely originated because of confused and distorted
boundaries, that has led to a situation where
higher brain functions are in an
internal war struggle with
lower brain warning and survival mechanisms. Proper and healthy boundaries need to be rediscovered and defined. But the nervous system is too distracted and exhausted from this inner war. Excessive attachment to thoughts, beliefs and identity story, might be a way to compensate for poor relational boundaries. To ease the confusion of not knowing where one's emotions start and end compared to where other's emotions start and end. Certainty, limitations, and structure is now found in beliefs, thoughts, story, role, identity, habits, righteousness, etc. Maybe these thought boundary fill ins are what make up ANPs?
Anyway.... sort of a clunky and quick response, this is still a work in progress. Hope some of it was helpful and not too controversial.